Russia: We Are Moving Forward With The Military Agreement Reached At Helsinki

Though Russia announced its readiness to implement an agreement between the two leaders, the details remain unknown.

According to Russian officials, President Donald Trump and President Vladimir Putin reached an agreement “in the sphere of international security” during their Monday meeting in Helsinki, Finland — but no one knows yet just what that agreement entails.

"The Ministry of Defense of the Russian Federation is ready for practical implementation of the agreements reached between Russian President Vladimir Putin and US President Donald Trump in the sphere of international security achieved at the Helsinki summit," Maj. Gen. Igor Konashenkov, a Russian military spokesman, said in a statement Tuesday.

The Russian military "is ready to intensify contacts with the US colleagues in the General Staff and other available channels to discuss the extension of the START treaty, cooperation in Syria, as well as other issues of ensuring military security," Konashenkov said.

A spokesperson for the National Security Council told CNN they were currently “reviewing the discussion” between the two leaders and declined to elaborate on what Trump might have agreed to during his one-on-one meeting with Putin.

The Pentagon offered no comment.

Sen. Jeanne Shaheen, a New Hampshire Democrat who sits on the Senate Armed Services and Foreign Relations Committees, called for the Foreign Relations Committee to ask the administration to allow Trump's interpreter in Finland to testify before Congress.

"Yesterday, President Trump handed global leadership and stature —free of charge— to Vladimir Putin, a man who has spent his entire life working against the interests of the United States and who brutally suppresses and murders his own citizens," said Shaheen said in a statement.

"I believe the Senate Foreign Relations Committee should hold a hearing with the American interpreter who was present during President Trump and President Putin's private meeting to determine what was specifically discussed and agreed to on the United States' behalf," Shaheen said.